I'd like to come back to some of the issues raised by Mr. Grinius. When Chinese state-owned companies acquire Canadian companies, are these then run as Canadian subsidiaries of a Chinese state-controlled company, or do they become Chinese subsidiaries within Canada? It almost seems like a rhetorical question.
I'm not sure that our regulatory framework and the way we decide these questions are adequately suited to this particular scenario. Should we think in terms of a special ongoing regulatory framework that's not a one-shot decision—“okay, we're going to allow this to proceed”—but that there be a regular review whenever these sorts of decisions are made. These are not regular corporate entities the way we understand them. This idea of “corporate DNA” is actually “central party DNA” in an evolving oligarchic state capitalist system within China.
In the opinion polling, the Canadian public may not fully comprehend what it is, but that unease about Chinese investments in major companies here in Canada is quite accurate. In an innate way, the public sees the potential dangers of a one-shot decision—"okay, we're going to allow this to proceed"—and then we live with the consequences for decades afterwards.
We'll start with you, sir.